In life, Harry Bridges stood 5 feet 6.
In bronze, he’ll hit 6 feet 4.
Bridges, revered by the West Coast dockworkers as founder of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, is the subject of a statue being sculpted by Key Peninsula artist Paul Michaels.
“People forget what the past has done for them,” said Tacoma maritime historian Ron Magden at a recent preview of a clay model of the Bridges sculpture.
People might forget, but longshore workers do not.
There’s a Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies at the University of Washington Seattle, and there’s a Harry Bridges Boulevard near the Port of Los Angeles.
Soon, there will be a statue in Tacoma.